Niger

2009

New York, September 24, 2009—A newspaper editor in police custody
in Niger since Sunday was charged with criminal libel on Wednesday in
connection with a story accusing a top official of involvement in a corruption
scandal, according to local journalists and news reports.

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New York, September 2, 2009--The Committee to Protect Journalists is concerned about the health of imprisoned editor Abdoulaye
Tiémogo after his transfer from
a hospital in Niger's capital,
Niamey, to a
prison in a remote town on Monday.

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New York, August
19, 2009--The
Committee to Protect Journalists condemns a prison sentence given on Tuesday to the editor of
a private newspaper in Niger.
Abdoulaye Tiémogo, editor of the weekly Le
Canard Déchaîné, has been in police custody in the capital, Niamey, since August 1.

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In Niger
today, the governmentis holding a public
referendum on a constitutional amendment that would pave the way for President Mamadou Tandja to run for
office indefinitely. It would also further increase the former army colonel's
control over the press. Tandja, at left, has charged ahead with the referendum despite overwhelming public opposition after he dissolved a resistant constitutional court and the National Assembly.

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New York, August 3, 2009--Two Nigerien editors whose weekly newspapers reported on corruption charges involving the national human rights commission have been in police custody since Saturday, according to local journalists and news reports.

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Dear Mr. President: We are writing to express our alarm at your administration's increasing restrictions on the Nigerien private press. We are concerned by the ongoing censorship of stories about the public opposition to your plans for a constitutional amendment that would scrap presidential term limits.

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With a simmering insurgency in the north, a split within the ruling government, and talk of a constitutional amendment to allow President Mamadou Tandja to run for a third term in 2009, authorities increasingly tightened restrictions on the press. The high-profile imprisonment of Moussa Kaka, a reporter well known for his coverage of the insurgency, illustrated tensions between the government and the press.

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New York, January 27, 2009--The editor of an independent newspaper in the West
African nation of Niger was jailed Monday in connection with an investigative
story alleging corruption in the finance ministry, according to local
journalists.